Unique resources created by an experienced Secondary English and History teacher. These are academically rigorous resources that target children between 13 and 18 years of age.
Unique resources created by an experienced Secondary English and History teacher. These are academically rigorous resources that target children between 13 and 18 years of age.
1) A PPT: to facilitate learning about the use of poison gas in WW1 and the gas masks which were provided to soldiers. Some context about the poet (Wilfred Owen). Students read and annotate Dulce et Decorum Est. This is followed by questions about the tone of the poem and its intended reading. Following this, students will identify the poetic devices within the poem and evaluate their effectiveness. This is followed by a series of questions for students to answer in their books (to help them expand their analysis). This is followed by a discussion to compare this text with other WW1 poems we have already explored and a reflection activity (KWL).
2) A handout for students to complete their analysis in (which also includes the details for their homework -- to write a mini essay about Owen’s representation of war in comparison to Seeger’s)
Task sheet for an assessment requiring the following things: Treatment, Making the magazine in photoshop, Reflecting on your final product, Responding to someone else’s magazine cover (critiquing)
The PowerPoint includes an example student magazine cover (annotated), the requirements for a treatment, an example treatment.
Additional resource: A scaffolding table for planning their magazine cover
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons.
The lesson opens with a discussion point about a contested issue - the difference between vandalism/graffiti and ‘street art.’ It provides some information about why people are compelled to graffiti. There is a news viewing activity which sheds light on this topic and features an Australian street artist. This is followed by some note taking tasks (defining vandalism and graffiti). There is some contextual information about the history of graffiti and a Venn Diagram (comparison) activity. This is followed by a series of pictures which students need to classify as either graffiti or street art.
What sort of things you will need to include in your music video review.
Practicing analysing narrative music videos (describing plot and identifying themes)
Discussing how you determine whether a music video is effective
Viewing Justin Timberlake’s Mirrors music video and an exemplar response to this clip.
More clips to analyse using the music video report card (also included).
6 resources developed for a year 8 English Unit.
a task sheet explaining their assessment (a multimodal presentation that explains a current social issue and uses poetry to challenge how people think and feel about the issue. )
An example PowerPoint created by a student for their assessment.
A written exemplar in a table (which highlights the structural requirements and expected language features)
A planning booklet for students to use as they prepare to write their assignment
A PowerPoint for a lesson taking them through what to write for body paragraph 1
A personal checklist for the student and parent to use once they have completed their first draft to make sure they have everything they need.
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - Aussie_Resources. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons (although with drafting time it may take a few lessons depending on the needs and abilities of students).
Going through the information from the task sheet so that students understand exactly what they need to do and have the opportunity to ask questions. It also introduces students to the street art stimulus examples that they will respond to in their assessment ‘Merry Crisis’ and ‘I Have a Dream. ’There is an article about each mural and why it was created. There is also information about how to find viewpoints about the street art (including where to look and what search stems to enter). There are also screenshot examples of comments about the street art (e.g. from Twitter, Facebook or Tripadvisor). Students are shown the section of the graphic organiser that they need to fill in (where they store their information that they need for body paragraph 2). There are also some clips explaining what art curators do as this is the role they will be utilising in their assessment.
The first lesson to introduce students to the ‘Science and Technology’ unit. It begins with a pre-unit survey to identify what students already know and to prompt class discussions. It features an infographic about identity crime within Australia which has some interesting statistics to unpack. Afterwards, students take notes about the key terms (science and technology) before exploring some of the advances with using technology to access healthcare. This includes some news stories from the beginning of 2020 when COVID 19 necessitated swift upgrades in this field. It is a good lesson for engaging students in the topic and getting them to think about the impact of technology on people’s lives. It also includes some videos of cool technology innovations if you get through all the lesson content.
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - Aussie_Resources. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. This unit allows students to demonstrate planning, evaluation and inquiry by investigating the role technology, in particular the internet and social media, plays in their own life. They will explore the advantages and challenges associated with changing technology and how they can be safe when using it. Students will evaluate and analyse how science and technology has advanced the way we interact and improve our way of living. Students will learn how science and technology can help out society in the 21st Century. They will also learn the effects that science and technology have on society.
Extracts from the Hobbit used to exemplify the different parts of a short story structure. Some clips from the film used as well. Additional examples from the set text for this year 12 unit (An Autobiography called Slave by Mende Nazer).
The various factors that make a story newsworthy. Definitions, written examples and film examples. Topical issues from the past e.g. Tsunami, Beaconsfield Mining, Brisbane Floods.
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons.
A handout version of the teacher exemplar (for Everybody Loves Raymond conflict scenario)
PPT presentation - This lesson is designed to scaffold students to write paragraphs about Person A and B for the findings section of their report. It begins with a review of the TEEEL paragraph structure. This is followed by slides exemplifying this with the teacher response. On the next slide there are sentence starters to assist students to write their own paragraph.
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons.
The lesson begins with a short YouTube video to consolidate previous learning (The Big 5 personality types). The video considers how each personality type would react to being stranded on a desert island. The main task for this lesson is for students to fill in Section 1C of their Inquiry Booklet - including the section where they write about their attitudes, values and beliefs (towards education). There are example responses to help students. This is followed by a video clip from Boston Legal which students watch and then partake in a class discussion to reveal the personality traits and types they observe. Afterwards, students fill in the remaining information about themselves.
Two resources for teaching year 8 history:
1) A scaffolded activity teaching students to research castles (What was a castle’s purpose in medieval times?) and complete a PEEL paragraph to communicate their answers.
2) An example PEEL paragraph responding to the question How did castles during medieval times change?
A PowerPoint which defines realism and how this genre emerged. It also features 3 tips for character development. This is followed by a crime writing activity with a visual stimulus (which can be used to gauge students' creative writing skills prior to handing out their actual assessment).
5 resources for a crime fiction unit for Senior English students. The first is an explanation of the cozy fiction subgenre and its codes and conventions. It includes an explanation of 'Murder on the Orient Express.' A list of more recent TV examples e.g. Rosemary and Thyme. It also includes a trailer of Identity which utilses many of the genre features but places them in a modern setting.
Resource 2: Spelling list for the term - 24 words per week.
Resource 3: Homework for this lesson.
Resource 4: homework for the following lesson (after beginning watching Identity).
Resource 5: retrieval chart for while watching identity.
A PowerPoint defining the following terms:
● Shape
● Line
● Colour
● Point
● Value
● Balance
● Perspective/Scale
● Harmony
● Movement
● Texture
● Unity
● Variety
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons.
A handout version of the teacher exemplar (for Everybody Loves Raymond conflict scenario)
A conflict triggers quiz for students to take during the lesson warm up (which can provide further vocabulary to explain what triggers the characters in their scenario)
A PPT presentation - The lesson begins by looking at a list of reasons which can trigger conflict. Then students take the conflict triggers quiz and everyone discusses their findings. Explain how they can use this vocab in their upcoming task. Explain how to fill in the table for Section 4 of Inquiry booklet. Look at what the cognitive verbs ‘compare’ and ‘contrast’ mean as this is a key skill in their assessment. Show students the teacher example of the filled in graphic organiser. Afterwards, students complete their own table for their assessment. Finally, there is an explanation in layman’s terms of what criteria 2.2 is assessing in their report.